US7924114B2 - Electrical filters with improved intermodulation distortion - Google Patents
Electrical filters with improved intermodulation distortion Download PDFInfo
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- US7924114B2 US7924114B2 US12/163,837 US16383708A US7924114B2 US 7924114 B2 US7924114 B2 US 7924114B2 US 16383708 A US16383708 A US 16383708A US 7924114 B2 US7924114 B2 US 7924114B2
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01P—WAVEGUIDES; RESONATORS, LINES, OR OTHER DEVICES OF THE WAVEGUIDE TYPE
- H01P1/00—Auxiliary devices
- H01P1/20—Frequency-selective devices, e.g. filters
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- H—ELECTRICITY
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- H03H—IMPEDANCE NETWORKS, e.g. RESONANT CIRCUITS; RESONATORS
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Definitions
- the present inventions generally relate to microwave circuits, and in particular, microwave filters.
- Electrical filters have long been used in the processing of electrical signals.
- such electrical filters are used to select desired electrical signal frequencies from an input signal by passing the desired signal frequencies, while blocking or attenuating other undesirable electrical signal frequencies.
- Filters may be classified in some general categories that include low-pass filters, high-pass filters, band-pass filters, and band-reject filters, indicative of the type of frequencies that are selectively passed by the filter.
- filters can be classified by type, such as Butterworth, Chebyshev, Inverse Chebyshev, and Elliptic, indicative of the type of bandshape frequency response (frequency cutoff characteristics) the filter provides relative to the ideal frequency response.
- Microwave filters are generally built using two circuit building blocks: a plurality of resonators, which store energy very efficiently at one frequency, f 0 ; and couplings, which couple electromagnetic energy between the resonators to form multiple stages or poles.
- a four-pole filter may include four resonators.
- the strength of a given coupling is determined by its reactance (i.e., inductance and/or capacitance).
- the relative strengths of the couplings determine the filter shape, and the topology of the couplings determines whether the filter performs a band-pass or a band-reject function.
- the resonant frequency f 0 is largely determined by the inductance and capacitance of the respective resonator.
- the frequency at which the filter is active is determined by the resonant frequencies of the resonators that make up the filter.
- Each resonator must have very low internal resistance to enable the response of the filter to be sharp and highly selective for the reasons discussed above. This requirement for low resistance tends to drive the size and cost of the resonators for a given technology.
- band-pass filters are conventionally used in cellular base stations and other telecommunications equipment to filter out or block RF signals in all but one or more predefined bands.
- such filters are typically used in a receiver front-end to filter out noise and other unwanted signals that would harm components of the receiver in the base station or telecommunications equipment.
- Placing a sharply defined band-pass filter directly at the receiver antenna input will often eliminate various adverse effects resulting from strong interfering signals at frequencies near the desired signal frequency. Because of the location of the filter at the receiver antenna input, the insertion loss must be very low so as to not degrade the noise figure. In most filter technologies, achieving a low insertion loss requires a corresponding compromise in filter steepness or selectivity.
- filters have been fabricated using normal; that is, non-superconducting conductors. These conductors have inherent lossiness, and as a result, the circuits formed from them have varying degrees of loss. For resonant circuits, the loss is particularly critical.
- the quality factor (Q) of a device is a measure of its power dissipation or lossiness. For example, a resonator with a higher Q has less loss.
- Resonant circuits fabricated from normal metals in a microstrip or stripline configuration typically have Q's at best on the order of four hundred.
- HTS high temperature superconductor
- IMD intermodulation distortion
- Intermodulation products are generated at various orders, with the order of a distortion product given by the sum of m+n.
- the second order intermodulation products of two fundamental signals at f 1 and f 2 will occur at f 1 +f 2 , f 2 ⁇ f 1 , 2f 1 , and 2f 2
- the third order intermodulation products of the two signals at f 1 and f 2 will occur at 2f 1 +f 2 , 2f 1 ⁇ f 2 , f 1 +2f 2 , f 1 ⁇ 2f 2 (or 2f 1 ⁇ f 2 and 2f 2 ⁇ f 1 ), 3f 1 , and 3f 2 , where 2f 1 is the second harmonic of f 1 , 2f 2 is the second harmonic of f 2 , 3f 1 is the third harmonic of f 1 , and 3f 2 is the third harmonic of f 2 .
- bandpass filtering may be an effective means of eliminating most of the undesired intermodulation products without affecting the inband performance
- the third order intermodulation products 2f 1 ⁇ f 2 , 2f 2 ⁇ f 1 are usually too close to the fundamental signals f 1 , f 2 to be filtered out, as shown in FIG. 1 . If the intermodulation products are within the passband, filtering becomes impossible.
- IMD products when strong signals from more than one transmitter are present at the input of a receiver, as is commonly the case in telephone systems, IMD products will be generated.
- the level of these undesired IMD products is a function of the power received and the linearity of the receiver/preamplifier.
- the second order intermodulation products will increase at a rate of the input signal squared
- the third order intermodulation products will increase at a rate of the input signal cubed.
- second order intermodulation products have an amplitude proportional to the square of the input signal
- the third order intermodulation products have an amplitude proportional to the cube of the input signal.
- the third order intermodulation products will rise by 3 dB.
- the levels of third order intermodulation products are initially very small compared to lower order intermodulation products (which generally dominate), the third order intermodulation products grow at higher rates. Therefore, when attempting to increase the power-handling of a non-linear device, such as an amplifier, the third order intermodulation products, which are closest to the passband of interest (i.e., 2f 1 ⁇ f 2 , 2f 2 ⁇ f 1 ) are the greatest concern.
- the input power level at which the intercept points occur is referred to as an IP value. If the exponent of the power dependence of the IMD product is n, the IP value is denoted by IP n . For example, for second order IMD products, the IP value is IP 2 , and for third order IMD products, the IP value is IP 3 .
- IP n the exponent of the power dependence of the IMD product
- IP 2 the exponent of the power dependence of the IMD product
- IP 3 IP 3
- the concept of an IMD intercept point has been developed to help quantify a device's IMD performance, with the IMD performance improving as the IP value is higher.
- the performance of the filter also changes with manufacturing process variations of the resonators and filters. Although some filters might be manufactured to achieve the required filtering capabilities for filtering out competing system out-of-band signaling, many of them would fail in such applications, and are thus sorted out during testing, resulting in low filter manufacturing yields.
- the non-linearities of an RF filter, and thus the IMD exhibited by the filter may be minimized by increasing the size of the filter.
- the band-stop filter comprises a thin-film quasi-lumped element structure (e.g., made of high temperature superconductor (HTS) material, although other types of filters can be used for the band-stop filter.
- HTS high temperature superconductor
- the method comprises designing a band-stop filter that includes a signal transmission path having an input and an output, a plurality of resonant elements disposed along the signal transmission path between the input and the output, and a plurality of non-resonant elements coupling the resonant elements together to form a stopband having a plurality of transmission zeroes corresponding to respective frequencies of the resonant elements.
- a band-stop filter that includes a signal transmission path having an input and an output, a plurality of resonant elements disposed along the signal transmission path between the input and the output, and a plurality of non-resonant elements coupling the resonant elements together to form a stopband having a plurality of transmission zeroes corresponding to respective frequencies of the resonant elements.
- four resonators are used, although any number of plural resonators can be used, e.g., 2, 8, 16, etc.
- the method further comprises changing the order in which the resonant elements are disposed along the signal transmission path to create a plurality of filter solutions, computing a performance parameter for each of the filter solutions, and comparing the performance parameters to each other.
- the performance parameter is an intermodulation distortion performance parameter (e.g., third order IMD or third order intercept).
- the method further comprises selecting one of the filter solutions based on the comparison of the computed performance parameters, and constructing the band-stop filter using the selected filter solution.
- the non-resonator elements take the form of admittance inverters that are coupled in parallel and series to the resonator elements.
- a coupling matrix representation of each of the filter solutions are generated, and the performance parameter for each of the filter solutions is computed from the respective coupling matrix representation.
- the filter design may include nodes respectively between the non-resonant elements coupled in parallel to the resonator elements, nodes respectively between the resonator elements and the non-resonant elements coupled in series to the resonant elements, and nodes at the input and output, wherein each dimension of the coupling matrix includes the nodes.
- the method may further comprise reducing each coupling matrix to its simplest form, and determining whether the reduced coupling matrices are different relative to each other. In this manner, the filters solutions can be confirmed to be unique.
- two of the band-stop filters can be coupled together in a manner that creates a passband between the respective stopbands.
- a radio frequency (RF) band-stop filter comprises a thin-film quasi-lumped element structure (e.g., made of high temperature superconductor (HTS) material, although other types of filters can be used for the band-stop filter.
- HTS high temperature superconductor
- the band-stop filter comprises a plurality of resonant elements coupled together to form a stopband. At least two of the resonant elements have third order intermodulation distortion (IMD) components (e.g., third order IMD products 2f 2 ⁇ f 1 and 2f 1 ⁇ f 2 ) different from each other, such that the third order IMD components of the filter are asymmetrical about the stopband.
- IMD intermodulation distortion
- the resonator elements may, e.g., have transmission lines that differ from each other by at least one wavelength, so that the IMD components are asymmetrical.
- a radio frequency (RF) network comprises a band-pass filter configured for creating a passband, and a band-stop filter that includes a plurality of resonant elements coupled together to form a stopband.
- the band-stop filter comprises a thin-film quasi-lumped element structure (e.g., made of high temperature superconductor (HTS) material, although other types of filters can be used for the band-stop filter.
- HTS high temperature superconductor
- At least two of the resonant elements have third order intermodulation distortion (IMD) components (third order IMD products 2f 2 ⁇ f 1 and 2f 1 ⁇ f 2 ) different from each other, such that the third order IMD components are asymmetrical about the stopband.
- IMD intermodulation distortion
- the third order IMD components closest to the passband are decreased (e.g. at least 10 dB).
- the resonator elements may, e.g., have transmission lines that differ from each other by at least one wavelength, so that the IMD components are asymmetrical.
- the filter network further comprises another band-stop filter that includes another plurality of resonant elements coupled together to form another stopband.
- At least two of the other resonant elements have other third order intermodulation distortion (IMD) components different from each other, such that the other third order IMD components are asymmetrical about the other stopband.
- IMD intermodulation distortion
- the band-pass filter and the other band-stop filter are coupled together in a manner that sharpens another one of the edges of the passband.
- FIG. 1 is a diagram of the intermodulation distortion (IMD) products generated by a prior art filter
- FIG. 2 is a diagram showing the intercept points between IMD components and the fundamental signal of a prior art filter
- FIG. 3 is a block diagram illustrating a communications system constructed in accordance with one embodiment of the present inventions
- FIG. 4 is a block diagram illustrating one representation of a band-stop filter used in the communications system of FIG. 3 ;
- FIG. 5 is a block diagram illustrating another representation of the band-stop filter of FIG. 4 constructed in accordance with the present inventions
- FIG. 6 is a coupling matrix representation of the band-stop filter of FIG. 5 ;
- FIG. 7 the coupling matrix of FIG. 6 filled in with exemplary coupling values
- FIG. 8 is a diagram showing the frequency response of the fundamental signal output from the band-pass filter of FIG. 5 constructed in accordance with the coupling matrix of FIG. 7 ;
- FIGS. 9 a - 9 h each illustrates a resonator matrix block (top), frequency response of the electrical nodal current (middle), and reduced coupling matrix (bottom), wherein a different resonator order is used within the band-stop filter of FIG. 5 ;
- FIGS. 10 a and 10 b each illustrates a reduced coupling matrix (top), frequency response of the electrical current in the resonators (left), and frequency response of the fundamental signal and third order IMD, wherein a specific resonator order is used within the band-stop filter of FIG. 5 ;
- FIG. 11 is the computed frequency response of the band-stop filter of FIG. 5 designed at 860 MHz and 2 MHz bandwidth;
- FIG. 12 is the computed frequency response of the resonator currents within the band-stop of FIG. 11 , wherein the resonators are identical;
- FIG. 13 is the computed frequency response of the resonator powers within the band-stop of FIG. 11 , wherein the resonators are identical;
- FIG. 14 is the computed frequency response of the resonator powers within the band-stop of FIG. 11 , wherein the second resonator has been modified;
- FIG. 15 is the computed frequency response of the fundamental signal, IMD using identical resonators, and IMD using a second modified resonator;
- FIG. 16 is a circuit diagram of a band-pass filter constructed using two of the band-stop filters of FIG. 5 ;
- FIG. 17 is the measured frequency response of the IMDs of the band-stop filter used in the band-pass filter of FIG. 16 .
- the communications system 200 may be used in, for example, a base station.
- the communications system 200 generally comprises a front-end receiver system 202 , a transmit system 204 , and an antenna 206 shared by the receiver and transmit systems 202 , 204 .
- the receiver system 202 comprises a filter network 208 for filtering RF signals 210 received by the antenna 206 , and a receiver 212 for receiving the filtered RF signals 210 from the filter network 208 .
- the filter network 208 is used to selectively pass the received RF signals 210 within a designated passband to the receiver 212 , while filtering out interfering signals (which typically include RF signals transmitted by other communications systems and co-located transmission signals generated by the transmit system 204 ) located outside the operating frequency of the receiver 212 .
- the transmit system 204 comprises a transmitter 214 for generating RF signals 216 , and a filter network 218 for filtering the RF signals generated by the transmitter 214 and transmitting these filtered RF signals to the antenna 206 .
- the filter network 218 is used to selectively pass the transmit signals 216 within a designated passband to another receiver (not shown), for example, a cellular telephone, via the antenna 206 .
- another receiver not shown
- separate antennas can be used for the respective signals.
- the filter network 208 of the receiver system 202 comprises a non-superconducting filter 220 and a superconducting filter 222 , preferably a High Temperature Superconducting (HTS) filter.
- the input of the non-superconducting filter 220 receives the RF signals 210 from the antenna 206 .
- the output of the non-superconducting filter 220 is coupled to the input of the superconducting filter 222 , and the output of the superconducting filter 222 is coupled to the receiver 212 .
- the non-superconducting filter 220 pre-filters the received RF signals 210 before they are filtered by the superconducting filter 222 .
- the non-superconducting filter 220 is a band-pass filter tuned to pass the received RF signals 210 in a passband in the total receiving frequency range of the communications system 200 (e.g., using the Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS) standard, the receiving frequency range is approximately 824 MHz to 849 MHz).
- the superconducting filter 222 is also a band-pass filter, but is tuned to pass the pre-filtered signals from the non-superconducting filter 220 in a passband located within the passband of the non-superconducting filter 220 . In this manner, the non-superconducting filter 220 filters out interfering signals before they are inputted into the superconducting filter 222 , while the superconducting filter 220 provides sharp frequency selectivity to the receiver 212 .
- the filter network 218 of the transmit system 204 comprises a non-superconducting filter 224 and a superconducting filter 226 , preferably a High Temperature Superconducting (HTS) filter.
- the superconducting filter 226 receives the RF signals generated by the transmitter 214 .
- the output of the superconducting filter 226 is coupled to the input of the non-superconducting filter 224 , and the output of the non-superconducting filter 224 is coupled to the antenna 206 .
- the superconducting filter 226 pre-filters the transmit RF signals before they are filtered by the non-superconducting filter 224 .
- the non-superconducting filter 224 is a band-pass filter tuned to pass the received RF signals 210 in a passband in the total transmitting frequency range of the communications system 200 (e.g., using the Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS) standard, the transmitting frequency range is approximately 869 MHz to 894 MHz).
- the superconducting filter 226 is a notch or band-stop filter tuned to clip or reject a transmit signal just outside of the desired transmit frequency and then pass the remaining signal to the non-superconducting filter 224 .
- the superconducting filter 226 may clip the transmit signal close to the lower transmit passband edge and/or the higher transmit bandpass edge.
- Two superconducting filters can be used if the transmit signal is to be clipped at both the lower transmit passband edge and the higher transmit passband edge.
- the superconductive filter 226 does not need to have the same high power characteristics of the typical band-pass filter used in cellular telephone base station transmitters.
- the filter network 218 may exhibit improved loss performance within at least one of the passband edges.
- the band-stop filter 10 can be designed by first creating a coupling matrix representation of the band-stop filter 10 is created.
- a coupling matrix representation has become a very powerful tool in the design of very complex band-pass filters, as shown in S. Amari, “Synthesis of Cross-Coupled Resonator Filters Using an Analytical Gradient-Based Optimization Technique,” IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory & Tech., Vol. 48, No. 9, pp. 1559-1564, September 2000.
- Coupling matrix representations have also been applied with great success to low-pass and high-pass filters, but not so extensively to notch or band-stop filters.
- band-stop filters have traditionally been designed using impedance inverters (K) and shunt reactance resonators (X).
- the band-stop filter 10 generally comprises a (1) signal transmission path 12 having an input 14 (labeled S) and an output 16 (labeled L); (2) a plurality of nodes 18 (in this case, four nodes respectively labeled 1-4) disposed in series along the signal transmission path 12 ; (3) a plurality of resonant elements 20 (in this case, four shunt reactance resonators respectively labeled X 1 , X 2 , X 3 , and X 4 ) coupled between the respective nodes 18 and ground; and (4) a plurality of non-resonant elements 22 (in this case, five impedance inverters respectively labeled K 01 , K 12 , K 23 , K 34 , and K 45 ) coupled in series between the input 14 and output 16 , such that the nodes 18 are respectively between the
- the representation illustrated in FIG. 4 can be expanded into the generalized representation of a filter 50 illustrated in FIG. 5 , where the series elements are admittance inverters (J) and the resonators are represented as shunt susceptances (B)).
- this representation of the band-stop filter 50 generally comprises (1) a signal transmission path 52 having an input 54 (labeled S) and an output 56 (labeled L); (2) a plurality of non-resonant nodes 58 (in this case, four nodes respectively labeled 1 - 4 ) disposed in series along the signal transmission path 52 ; (3) a plurality of resonant nodes 60 (in this case, four nodes respectively numbered 5-8) disposed between the respective non-resonant nodes 58 and ground; (4) a plurality of resonant elements 62 (in this case, four shunt reactance resonators respectively labeled B 1 R , B 2 R , B 3 R , and B 4 R ) coupled between the respective non-resonant nodes 58 and ground; (5) a first plurality of non-resonant elements 64 ( 1 ) (in this case, five admittance inverters (J 01 , J 12 , J 23 , J 34 , and J 45 ) coupled in
- the signal transmission path 52 takes the form of a transmission line
- the resonant elements 62 are quasi-lumped element electrical components, such as inductors and capacitors, and in particular, thin-film quasi-lumped structures, such as planar spiral structures, zig-zag serpentine structures, single coil structures, and double coil structures.
- Such structures may include thin film epitaxial high temperature superconductors (HTS) that are patterned to form capacitors and inductors on a low loss substrate. Further details discussing high temperature superconductor quasi-lumped element filters are set forth in U.S. Pat. No. 5,616,539, which is expressly incorporated herein by reference.
- FIG. 6 illustrates the coupling matrix representation of the filter 50 , as represented in FIG. 5 .
- the nodes S, 1-8, and L are on the left and top sides of the matrix representation, with the coupling values (susceptance values (B) and admittance inverter values (J)) between the respective nodes forming the body of the coupling matrix representation. Because the coupling matrix representation is reciprocal, the values below the diagonal of the matrix representation are set to “zero.”
- the coupling matrix representation shown in FIG. 6 can be divided into four matrix blocks, represented by:
- m [ m ( C ) m ( Q ) m ( Q ) m ( R ) ] , where m (C) is a non-resonant matrix block containing the susceptance values for non-resonant elements B 1 N, B 2 N, B 3 N, and B 4 N and the admittance inverter values for non-resonant elements J 12 , J 23 , J 34 , and J 45 ; m (Q) is a non-resonant matrix block containing the admittance inverter values for non-resonant elements J 1 , J 2 , J 3 , and J 4 ; and m (R) is a resonant matrix block containing the susceptance values for resonant elements B 1 R , B 2 R , B 3 R , and B 4 R . As is customary, the values in the matrix representation are normalized to a frequency range of ⁇ 1 to 1.
- FIG. 8 illustrates the filter response illustrated in FIG. 8 , which illustrates the input reflection coefficient S 11 of the frequency response, and the forward transmission coefficient S 21 of the frequency response.
- This filter response was modeled in accordance with the following equations:
- S 11 ⁇ ( s ) F ⁇ ( s ) E ⁇ ( s )
- S 21 ⁇ ( s ) P ⁇ ( s ) ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ E ⁇ ( s )
- ⁇ E ⁇ 2 ⁇ F ⁇ 2 + ⁇ P ⁇ 2 ⁇ 2
- S 11 is the input reflection coefficient of the filter
- S 21 is the forward transmission coefficient
- s is the normalized frequency
- F and P are N-order polynomial (where N is the number of resonant elements) of the generalized complex frequency s
- ⁇ is a constant that defines equal ripple return loss.
- w f c B ⁇ ⁇ W ⁇ ( f f c - fc f ) , where f is the real frequency, f c is the center frequency, and BW is the bandwidth of the filter. Further details discussing the transformation of normalized frequency into real frequency are set forth in “Microwave Filters, Impedance-Matching Networks, and Coupling Structures,” G. Matthaei, L. Young and E. M. T. Jones, McGraw-Hill (1964).
- the non-resonant elements 64 couple the resonant elements 62 in a manner that forms a stopband 66 having a plurality of transmission zeroes 68 corresponding to the respective frequencies of the resonant elements 62 (in this case, four transmission zeroes 68 respectively corresponding to the frequencies of the four resonant elements 62 ).
- the transmission zeroes 68 are positioned at 0.9286, 0.3944, ⁇ 0.3944, and ⁇ 0.9286 in the normalized frequency range, thereby creating a stopband 66 having a normalized frequency range of ⁇ 1 to 1.
- the filter response also includes a pair of reflection zeroes 70 visible over the normalized frequency range of ⁇ 5 and 5.
- the positions of the four transmission zeroes 68 are replicated exactly in the resonant matrix block of the expanded coupling matrix.
- the order of the transmission zeroes 68 is not specified, so a class of reduced solutions is possible simply be selecting the order of the transmission zeroes 68 in the resonant matrix block. That is, the frequencies of the four resonant elements 62 may remain the same, but their order along the signal transmission path 52 may be changed.
- At least one performance parameter in this case, the third order intermodulation distortion components
- the solution i.e., the ordering of the resonant elements 62
- the remaining coupling values in the expanded coupling matrix can be modified accordingly to generate the same magnitude filter response for each order of resonant elements 62 .
- the corresponding coupling matrices generated for the different resonant element orders can be reduced down to their simplest form.
- the coupling matrix representation generated in the manner shown in FIG. 6 will have (2N+2) ⁇ (2N+2) matrix elements, where N is the number of resonant elements 62 used to generate the coupling matrix.
- the expanded coupling matrix is relatively sparse in that many of the matrix elements have values of zero.
- the resonant frequency values in the reduced coupling matrices no longer correlate with the positions of the transmission zeroes 68 , and therefore, are not very useful when realizing circuits, they do provide a clear indication that two expanded matrices do not simply reduce to the same solution.
- FIGS. 9 a - 9 h illustrate the expected electrical current levels flowing through non-resonant elements J 1 -J 4 (at resonant nodes 5 - 8 ) plotted against the normalized frequency for eight coupling matrix representations with different transmission zero orders.
- the order of the transmission zeroes are provided above it and the reduced matrix is shown below it.
- the node currents are different for each of the different transmission zero orders.
- the node currents for transmission zeroes of the same frequency will differ if they have a different order, and will be the same if they have the same order.
- the transmission zeroes can be treated as independent design parameters.
- the J 1 electrical current frequency response (node 5 ) and the J 4 electrical current frequency response (node 8 ) in the resonator order arrangement shown in FIG. 9 a is the same as the J 1 electrical current frequency response (node 5 ) and the J 4 electrical current frequency response (node 8 ) in the resonator order arrangement shown in FIG. 9 b , since the first resonator B 1 R of both arrangements have the same frequency (i.e., 0.928596) and the fourth resonator B 4 R of both arrangements have the same frequency ( ⁇ 0.928596).
- the J 2 electrical current frequency response (node 6 ) and the J 3 electrical current frequency response (node 7 ) in the resonator order arrangement shown in FIG. 9 a differs from the J 3 electrical current frequency response (node 6 ) and the J 3 electrical current frequency response (node 7 ) in the resonator order arrangement shown in FIG. 9 b , since the second resonator B 2 R of both arrangements have different frequencies (i.e., 0.394362 and ⁇ 0.394362), and the third resonator B 2 R of both arrangements have different frequencies (i.e., ⁇ 0.394362 and 0.394362).
- the computed node currents can be used to predict both raw power handling and intermodulation distortion (IMD) for filters constructed in accordance with the coupling matrix representations.
- IMD intermodulation distortion
- the node current frequency response, fundamental signal frequency response, and the IMD (3 rd order) frequency response were computed for two expanded coupling matrices with different resonator orders are shown along with the corresponding reduced matrices.
- the band-stop filter 50 will serve as a notch filter to form the low frequency side of a band-pass filter
- the third order IMD components for the respective resonator frequencies above the band-stop (and in particular, the IMD at 2f 2 ⁇ f 1 and 2f 1 ⁇ f 2 ) will be the most significant.
- the values for these IMD components are respectively ⁇ 119 dBm and ⁇ 128 dBm for the configuration in FIG. 10( a ), and respectively ⁇ 117.3 dBm and ⁇ 131 dBm for the resonator configuration in FIG. 10( b ).
- the resonator ordering used in the configuration of FIG. 10( a ) may be selected in physically constructing the filter, since its worst case IMD is less than the worst case IMD for the resonator ordering used in the configuration of FIG. 10( b ).
- the best filter solution e.g., the one that provides the best IMD (and power handling)
- significant improvements can be made in the IMD (and power handling) performance to be achieved with only modest changes to the filter.
- Another manner in which to improve the IMD performance, and thus the power handling performance, is to independently design the resonant elements 62 in the band-stop filter 50 in a manner that provides a third order IMD frequency response that is asymmetrical about the band-stop. This is especially useful when one or two of the band-stop filters 50 are used to sharpen one or both of the lower and upper bandpass edges, as described above with respect to FIG. 3 .
- the IMD performance required on one side of the stopband may not be as critical as the IMD performance required on the other side of the stopband.
- the IMD performance required on the side of the stopband that is closest to the passband may be more critical than the IMD performance required on the side of the stopband that is further from the passband.
- the IMD performance required on one side of the passband may not be as critical as the IMD performance required on the other side of the passband. For example, there may be more interference on the high side of the passband that needs to be filtered out of the signal as opposed to the interference on the low side of the passband.
- the band-stop filter 50 illustrated in FIG. 5 was designed to operate at 860 MHz with a 2 MHz bandwidth
- the input reflection coefficient S 11 of the filter and the forward transmission coefficient S 21 of the frequency response for the fundamental signal was computed as shown in FIG. 11 .
- the resonant elements 62 in the filter 50 were first designed to be identical, each formed of half-wavelength transmission line at the resonant frequency.
- the electrical current flowing and the power within the respective resonators were computed for the conventional filter in response to a 1 W input signal P in .
- the computed current within the respective resonators was plotted against the frequency, as illustrated in FIG. 12 .
- the computed power within the respective resonators was plotted against the frequency, as illustrated in FIG. 13 . As shown in FIGS. 12 and 13 , the current and power is highest in the second resonator B 2 R .
- resonators in conventional filters are designed so that each resonator has the same performance (e.g., loss (Q) and IMD performance), individual resonators may experience some variations during manufacturing, but these variations have not been considered desirable.
- one of the resonant elements 62 in the filter 50 and in particular, the second resonator B 2 R , was modified using a two wavelength transmission line. It is known that the longer the transmission line used to create a resonator, the more power-handling capability the resonator will have.
- 6,026,311 which is expressly incorporated herein by reference, can be used to improve the power-handling capability of the filter.
- the electrical current flowing and the output power within the respective resonators were computed for the modified filter in response to a 1 W input signal P in .
- the computed powers within the respective resonators were plotted against the frequency, as illustrated in FIG. 14 .
- the power within the second resonator B 2 R within the modified filter has been substantially reduced as compared to the power within the second resonator B 2 R within the conventional filter ( FIG. 13 ). Because the remaining resonators within the modified filter are identical to those in the conventional filter, the power within these resonators are substantially the same for the conventional filter and modified filter. As shown in FIG. 15 , simply using an improved resonator for the second resonator B 2 R can greatly improve the IMD at the higher frequency side of the stopband from ⁇ 15.46 dBm to ⁇ 31.03 dBm. Thus, if this stopband filter is used on the lower frequency side of a passband, the IMD within the lower frequency side of the passband will be substantially reduced.
- the results shown in FIG. 15 were confirmed experimentally by fabricating the set of band-stop filters 100 shown in FIG. 16 using a planar, high temperature superconducting (HTS) structure.
- the set of band-stop filters 100 includes two band-stop filters: a conventional band-stop filter 102 ( 1 ) and a modified band-stop filter 102 ( 2 ), both filters were fabricated on the same HTS wafer to eliminate any wafer-to-wafer variations.
- the band-stop filters 102 ( 1 ), 102 ( 2 ) were designed to have a frequency response with a nominally identical forward transmission coefficient S 21 .
- the frequency response for the total third order IMD was measured at the outputs of the respective band-stop filters 102 ( 1 ), 102 ( 2 ), and as shown in FIG. 17 , the third order IMD at the high frequency side of the modified band-stop filter 102 ( 1 ) is substantially improved over that of the conventional band-stop filter 102 ( 2 ).
- the method of designing the stop-band filter 10 has been described above for use with planar HTS filters, it should be noted that this method is generally applicable to any method of realization of RF filters, including, but not limited: cavity filters, coaxial filters, combline filters, airline filters, dielectric puck filters, Micro Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS) filters, Surface Acoustic Wave (SAW) filters, Film Bulk Acoustic Resonator (FBAR) filters, bulk acoustic wave filters, and quasi-lumped element filters.
- MEMS Micro Electro-Mechanical Systems
- SAW Surface Acoustic Wave
- FBAR Film Bulk Acoustic Resonator
Landscapes
- Control Of Motors That Do Not Use Commutators (AREA)
Abstract
Description
where m(C) is a non-resonant matrix block containing the susceptance values for non-resonant elements B1N, B2N, B3N, and B4N and the admittance inverter values for non-resonant elements J12, J23, J34, and J45; m(Q) is a non-resonant matrix block containing the admittance inverter values for non-resonant elements J1, J2, J3, and J4; and m(R) is a resonant matrix block containing the susceptance values for resonant elements B1 R, B2 R, B3 R, and B4 R. As is customary, the values in the matrix representation are normalized to a frequency range of −1 to 1.
where S11 is the input reflection coefficient of the filter, S21 is the forward transmission coefficient, s is the normalized frequency, F and P are N-order polynomial (where N is the number of resonant elements) of the generalized complex frequency s, and ε is a constant that defines equal ripple return loss. Each of the coefficients S11 and S21 is capable of having up to an N number of zero-points, since the numerator has an Nth order. When both of the coefficients S11, S21 have all N zero-points, the filter response is considered fully elliptic. Further details discussing the modeling of filters are set forth in “Microstrip Filters for RF/Microwave Application,” Jia-Shen G. Hong and M. J. Lancaster, Wiley-Interscience 2001. The normalized frequency, s=iw can be mapped into real frequency in accordance with the equation:
where f is the real frequency, fc is the center frequency, and BW is the bandwidth of the filter. Further details discussing the transformation of normalized frequency into real frequency are set forth in “Microwave Filters, Impedance-Matching Networks, and Coupling Structures,” G. Matthaei, L. Young and E. M. T. Jones, McGraw-Hill (1964).
Claims (20)
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| US93735507P | 2007-06-27 | 2007-06-27 | |
| US12/163,837 US7924114B2 (en) | 2007-06-27 | 2008-06-27 | Electrical filters with improved intermodulation distortion |
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| EP (1) | EP2168238A1 (en) |
| JP (1) | JP2010532147A (en) |
| KR (1) | KR20100037116A (en) |
| CN (1) | CN101689843A (en) |
| WO (1) | WO2009003191A1 (en) |
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Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| WO2009003191A1 (en) | 2008-12-31 |
| KR20100037116A (en) | 2010-04-08 |
| US20090002102A1 (en) | 2009-01-01 |
| EP2168238A1 (en) | 2010-03-31 |
| CN101689843A (en) | 2010-03-31 |
| JP2010532147A (en) | 2010-09-30 |
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